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Francis Adams Cherry
Born: September 5, 1908, at Fort Worth, Texas
Died: July 15, 1965, at Jonesboro, Arkansas
Buried: Oaklawn Cemetery, Jonesboro
Served: 1953-1955
Arkansas's 35th governor
was born in Fort Worth, Texas, moved
with his family to Enid, Oklahoma,
attended Oklahoma A& M College,
and graduated from the University of
Arkansas in 1936, earning a law degree.
Cherry was appointed U.S. Commissioner
for the Jonesboro division of the Eastern
district in 1939, and next was named
referee for the workmen's compensation
commission. Cherry entered politics
in 1942, when he was elected chancellor
and probate judge of the 12th Chancery
District. During World War II, Cherry
waived his judicial immunity and applied
for a naval commission. After serving
two years in the navy, he resumed his
duties as chancellor in 1946 and was
re-elected to the position in 1948.
Cherry was elected Governor of Arkansas
on November 4, 1952 after a campaign
in which he effectively used the medium
of radio to raise both his visibility
and campaign funds. During his tenure,
a new department of finance and administration
was formed and reforms were made in
the highway commission. Cherry advocated
industrial development, and sent representatives
to other states to promote the use
of Arkansas' raw materials. He ran
unsuccessfully for a second term. After
leaving office in 1955, Cherry was
appointed to the federal Subversive
Activities Control Board and was named
its chairman in 1963. Governor Cherry
died in July 1965 after two years of
declining health.
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Orval Eugene Faubus
Born: January 7, 1910, near Combs, Arkansas
Died: December 14, 1994, at Conway, Arkansas
Buried: Orval E. Faubus Memorial Gardens, Combs
Served: 1955-1967
Orval Faubus was born
in 1910. Literally raised in a log
cabin and educated in one-and-two-room
schools, Faubus attended Commonwealth
College at Mena and worked as an itinerant
farmer, lumberjack and schoolteacher
before enlisting in the U.S. Army from
1942 to 1946. After the war, Faubus
served on the Arkansas State Highway
Commission and as director of highways
from 1952 to 1953. He was postmaster
at Huntsville from 1946 to 1947 and
from 1953 to 1954. Elected to the governorship
in 1954 after a runoff, Governor Faubus
initially pursued a moderately progressive
course in office but in 1956, to combat
his political opponents who were staunch
segregationists, he adopted a hard-line
segregationist stance. In 1957, Governor
Faubus gained national attention when
he called out the Arkansas National
Guard to prevent the integration of
Central High School in Little Rock,
but he was eventually forced to withdraw
the Guard. After threats of rioting,
President Dwight D. Eisenhower sent
U.S. troops to Little Rock and put
the National Guard under federal command
to ensure the integration of the school.
Faubus's political expediency resulted
in his repeated re-election as governor
but also prevented him from moving
into the national political arena.
During his six, two-year terms, he
served on the National Governors' Conference
Executive Committee from 1957 to 1958
and chaired the Southern Governors'
Conference from 1962 to 1963). In 1970,
1974, and 1986 he sought re-election
as governor of Arkansas but was unsuccessful
in each attempt at a political comeback,
the last time losing to Bill Clinton.
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Winthrop Rockefeller
Born: May 1, 1912, at New York City, New York
Died: February 22, 1973, at Palm Springs, California
Buried: Winrock Farm, Petit Jean Mountain
Served: 1967-1971
“The Arkansas Rockefeller” attended
Yale University from 1931 to 1934.
In 1941 he enlisted in the U.S. Army
as a private soldier, later earning
his officer’s commission. He
served in the Pacific Theater during
World War II, earning the Bronze Star
with Oak Leaf Cluster and the Purple
Heart. After the war, Rockefeller involved
himself in his family’s businesses
and various philanthropies before moving
to Arkansas in 1953. Rockefeller established
himself on over 900 acres atop Petit
Jean Mountain near Morrilton where
his Winrock Farms operation concentrated
on purebred Santa Gertrudis cattle,
feed grains, rice and hay. In 1955
he became the first chairman of the
Arkansas Industrial Development Commission.
During his nine-year leadership of
the commission, Arkansas led all states
in attracting new industry. Rockefeller’s
frustration with Arkansas’s effective
one-party system led him into politics;
his popularity, which crossed party
lines, made him the first viable Republican
gubernatorial hopeful since Reconstruction.
In 1964, Rockefeller ran for governor,
only to lose to Orval Faubus. He ran
again in 1966, this time successfully,
and won a second term in 1968. As governor,
Rockefeller was an advocate for human
rights, government reform, cultural
development, and education. His attempts
to reform Arkansas’s notorious
prison system met with much criticism,
but at his direction much of Hot Springs’s
illegal gambling was halted, and a
number of measures including a general
minimum-wage law, a freedom-of-information
act and banking reforms were enacted.
Rockefeller’s instinctive racial
progressivism led to the appointment
of increased numbers of African-Americans
to boards and commissions, plus increased
minority hiring in state jobs. Rockefeller
failed in his attempt to win a third
term in 1970 but continued to be active
in Republican Party matters and public
affairs until his death in 1973.
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Dale Leon Bumpers
Born: August 12, 1925, at Charleston, Arkansas
Died: n/a
Buried: n/a
Served: 1971-1975
Dale Bumpers briefly
attended the University of Arkansas
before enlisting in the U.S. Marines
during World War II. After the war
Bumpers finished his education at the
University of Arkansas and Northwestern
University Law School. Early in his
career he practiced as a small-town
attorney, owned and operated a hardware
store, raised cattle, and became active
in community affairs. He entered politics
via service on the Franklin County
and Charleston school boards, later
serving as Charleston City Attorney
and in 1968 Special Justice of Arkansas
Supreme Court. He ran for Governor
in 1970, one of seven Democratic primary
candidates including former governor
Faubus and Attorney-General Joe Purcell.
Finishing second to Faubus in the primary,
Bumpers bested the long-serving governor
in the runoff primary and went on to
handily defeat Winthrop Rockefeller
in the general election. Bumpers repeated
his success in 1972. During his first
term, Dale Bumpers successfully guided
a government-reorganization program
through the legislature, won a revision
of the state income-tax, increased
teacher salaries, oversaw the creation
of a consumer-fraud division in the
Attorney-General’s office, and
saw the legislature approve an expansion
of the state parks system. Second-term
victories included increased aid to
education, construction programs for
the state’s colleges and elimination
of the trustee system in the state
prison system. In 1974, Bumpers ran
for and won the U.S. Senate seat held
by J. William Fulbright, beginning
over two decades’ service in
that body.
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